Leading to excellence
Comprehensive Equity at Ohio State
Mary C. Juhas, Ph.DProgram Director
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Leading to excellence
• Context: The ADVANCE program at the National Science Foundation (NSF)
• Our project: CEOS• Our campus partners
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Leading to excellence
The National Science Foundation• an independent federal agency
created by Congress in 1950 "to promote the progress of science; to advance the national health, prosperity, and welfare; to secure the national defense…"
• annual budget of about $6.9 B (FY 2010)
• funding source for ~20 % of all federally supported basic research conducted by America’s colleges and universities 3
Arlington, VA
www.nsf.gov
Leading to excellence
NSF Plan for Broadening Participation
• Prepare a diverse globally engaged STEM workforce.
• Expand efforts to broaden participation from underrepresented groups and diverse institutions in all NSF activities.
• Integrate research with education, and building capacity.
• Improve processes to recruit and select highly qualified panel reviewers.
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Leading to excellence
• Goal: to develop systemic approaches to increase the representation and advancement of women in academic STEM careers, thereby contributing to the development of a more diverse science and engineering workforce.
• Institutional Transformation (IT) – include innovative systemic organizational approaches to
comprehensively transform institutions in ways that will increase the participation and advancement of women in STEM academic careers.
– must include a research component designed to study the effectiveness of the proposed innovations in order to contribute to the knowledge base informing academic institutional transformation
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The NSF ADVANCE Program
Leading to excellence
• OSU ADVANCE Funding: $3.6M, 5-year grant starting Sept. ’08
• 49 ADVANCE IT institutions; 5 in the Big Ten, 3 in Ohio (OSU, CWRU, and Wright State)– 22 active– 27 “graduated” but many have continued support.
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• Improve recruitment and retention of women & minority faculty
• Improve diversity of faculty & students• Establish a pool of senior women available for
leadership positions
ADVANCE: Expected Benefits
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• Natural & Mathematical Sciences• Engineering• Veterinary Medicine
Participating Colleges
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Representation of Women Faculty in 2007
College Asst Prof Assoc Prof Prof TotalN of Faculty
CBS 39.1% 23.7% 17.1% 25.5% 102
MAPS 37.8% 14.8% 6.3% 13.3% 225
ENG 26.8% 19.3% 5.4% 12.8% 272
VET 44.4% 33.3% 20.0% 27.1% 70
All OSU 40.8% 34.6% 18.2% 30.6% 3477
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TransformationalLeadership
Vision of Vision of Support and Support and InclusivenessInclusiveness
Individual Needs Individual Needs Understood and Understood and
MetMet
Flexible Career Flexible Career PoliciesPolicies
Cultural Cultural Assumptions Assumptions
Questioned and Questioned and ShiftedShifted
Changed Changed Practices Practices
Accommodate Accommodate DiversityDiversity
Transformational Leadership Model
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• Joan Herbers, PI: Natural & Mathematical Sciences• Jill Bystydzienski, co-PI: Women’s Studies• Anne Carey, co-PI: Natural & Mathematical Sciences• Anand Desai, co-PI: Glenn School of Public Policy• Anne Massaro, co-PI (0.5 FTE): Human Resources• Carolyn Merry, co-PI: Engineering• Jean Sander, co-PI: Veterinary Medicine• Susan Williams, co-PI: Vice Provost for Academic Policy and Faculty
Resources and Professor of English• Mary Juhas, Program Director (0.5 FTE): Engineering• Administrative Associate: Pamela Clark • GRAs: Samantha Howe & Jennifer Lang
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The Team
Leading to excellence
Four Elements of Project CEOS
1. Quarterly: leadership training for deans and department chairs
2. Monthly: peer mentoring for women leaders in the STEM Colleges
3. Year 2: Project REACH – commercializing your research4. Year 3: action learning teams that include deans, chairs,
faculty and staff in the participating Colleges and beyond
IMPORTANT: Facilitated by experts and continually assessed!
Leading to excellence
• Began with a needs assessment of women faculty• Prestige in participating: nomination from dean &
tuition paid by the College• Four-workshop series in WI and SP quarters 2010– Visioning Social Impact from Research– Building Awareness & Skills for Collaboration– Capitalizing on OSU Tech Transfer Resources– Stepping Out & Building a Network for Impact
• We will take this on the road to help other institutions.
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Project REACH: our signature program
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• U.S. Commerce Secretary announced on 9/24/09 plans to create a new Office of Innovation and Entrepreneurship within the Department of Commerce and launch a National Advisory Council on Innovation and Entrepreneurship. Both new initiatives will help leverage the entire federal government on behalf of promoting entrepreneurship in America.
• …will be geared toward the first step in the business cycle: moving an idea from someone's imagination, or from a research lab, into a business plan
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US Department of Commerce Press Release
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• Hazel Morrow-Jones: Director of The Women’s Place• Glenda La Rue: Director, Women in Engineering Program (ENG)• Jean Schelhorn: Associate Vice President, Office of Technology
Licensing & Commercialization• Michael Camp: Director of the Center for Entrepreneurship• Georgina Dodge: Office of Minority Affairs• Brenda Brueggemann: Program Coordinator, Disability Studies
Program• Julie Carpenter-Hubin: Director, Institutional Research &
Planning• Mary Juhas, ex officio
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Internal Advisory Committee
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• Dr. Joseph Alutto, Provost and Executive Vice President (chair)
• Dr. Sharon Bird: Assoc. Prof. of Sociology, Iowa State, co-PI on ISU’s ADVANCE project
• Dr. Carolyn Mahoney: President of Lincoln University, Missouri
• Dr. Farah Majidzadeh: CEO of Resource International, an engineering consulting firm in Columbus
• Dr. Sue Rosser: Provost, San Francisco State University
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External Advisory Committee
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1. University Communications2. STEM Abilities Grant3. The Women’s Place – PPLI, HERS, various workshops4. Chairs Collaborating with Chairs5. Work Life – Office of Human Resources6. OSU Child Care Center7. Academic Leader Development series8. President’s Council on Women – policy related9. Institutional Research & Planning10. Project GRO (Grants Research Outreach)11. Technology Licensing & Commercialization12. Center for Entrepreneurship13. Fisher College of Business14. Office of Research15. TechColumbus
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Campus Partners
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Leading to excellence
• 42/265 women faculty = 15.8%– Includes 16 from Knowlton School of Architecture, KSA– 26 women faculty excluding KSA = 11%– 14 assistant, 16 associate, 13 full professors
• Quarterly luncheons for women faculty in the executive board room of Pfahl Hall– The dean sometimes attends.– President Gee joined us last year and asked to be invited
again.• Monthly happy hours at the Blackwell
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The College of Engineering
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Source: ASEE, “By the Numbers”, 2008
Number of Tenured/TT Women Faculty in ENG
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THANK YOU!
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"The best time to plant a tree is twenty years ago. The
second best is today“ —Ancient Chinese proverb
"The best time to plant a tree is twenty years ago. The
second best is today“ —Ancient Chinese proverb